TOGETHER TOWARDS ‘DEMOCRATIC PEACE’
By
M.L. Sondhi
Sunday Pioneer, March 19, 2000
President Bill Clinton’s visit to India could mark not only
a possible watershed in the evolution of bilateral relations
between the two countries but also herald a qualitative
change in the foundations on which international linkages in
the global system are established and maintained.
There are signs of a growing US awareness
not only of India’s importance as a potential international
power, but also of its value as a democratic partner.
Significantly, several of Clinton’s recent remarks on
Indo-US relations seem to underscore this emerging
cognisance.
Thus, last month the ‘International herald
Tribune’ quoted the US President as saying that: “I am going
(to India) because it is the biggest democracy in the
world…I think we haven’t been working with them enough”.
This is an encouraging trend, but such
sentiments need to be “fleshed out” with a cogent political
rationale. In this regard, a concept of crucial consequence
is that which has become known as “democratic peace”. The
importance of this concept was highlighted by Gerald Segal,
the late Director of Studies at the International Institute
for Strategic Studies (IISS), in an article, “War and
Democracies” which appeared in ‘The Hindu’ on June 12, 1999.
Segal observes in it: “…one of the greatest
examples of progress in political affairs in the 20th
century is the apparent emergence of “democratic peace” –
the notion that mature democracies do not go to war with one
another. “In fact, among students of international
relations, the consensus that democratically governed states
rarely (if ever) go to war with each other is so strong that
among many eminent scholars it has acquired almost the
status of law of international politics.
It is thus at once both surprising and
regrettable that this notion has not been accorded greater
prominence in the formation of foreign policies of most
nations, including that of the US, which in many cases seems
to persist in an ill-founded even-handedness in its
attitudes to libertarian and authoritarian regimes. It is
difficult to comprehend the wisdom of such an approach,
whether in terms of moral merit or political pragmatism.
Indeed, it is particularly puzzling why the
US, which portrays itself as the promoter and the protector
of liberal democratic values, should adopt this position of
misplaced impartiality toward despotism and democracy.
Even more puzzling is why the bastion of
political philosophy should be the US State Department,
which recently voiced its desire for the striking of a
“balanced policy in the region” – ‘balance’ of course
indicating even-handedness in US dealings with democratic
India and decidedly less democratic Pakistan.
For more than any other organ of the US
government, the people at Foggy Bottom should be well-versed
in the principles of international relations. As such they
should be well aware that policies of appeasing
non-democratic regimes will in the long run not only
undermine America’s moral posture, but also its long-term
strategic interests around the globe in general, and in Asia
in particular.
The architects of Indian foreign policy
would do well to seize on the notion of “democratic peace”
and make it a centre-piece in the promotion of the country’s
diplomatic strategy, especially in forging a new era of
Indo-US relations.
Conversely, the architects of US foreign
policy would do well to be receptive and sympathetic to such
an initiative. For the historical record unequivocally
suggests that nothing promotes international stability and
tranquillity more than the propagation of liberal
democracy. Accordingly, it would seem that nothing could be
more consistent, indeed conducive to US interests than the
bolstering of like-minded libertarian regimes in conflict
with authoritarian rivals.
Thus for India, the strength of its
democratic traditions should be made a formidable asset in
the conduct of foreign policy. It is an asset that the US
should embrace, endorse and encourage. Indeed, the strength
of Indian democracy is underscored by the highly
inhospitable conditions in which it developed, that might
well have been expected to be highly conducive to the growth
of dictatorial rule.
For over the last five decades, the country
has had to contend with severe threats to national security,
military conflict, periods of economic hardship, political
assassinations and ethno-religious rivalries. The fact that
authoritarianism has not taken root in the country bears
eloquent testimony to the deep-rooted commitment to the
principles of liberty, pluralism and the right of dissent.
This resilience of Indian democracy was stressed by Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee during his 1998 visit to the
US. He pointed out that “despite changes in Government, the
political system itself has remained remarkably stable”,
cogently observing that this “testifies to the inherent
strength and stability of democratic traditions” in India.
It is precisely this resilient commitment to
libertarian democratic values, particularly in the face of
the harrowing challenges it has withstood, that should
assuage much of US chagrin and misgiving over New Delhi’s
independent stand on the nuclear issue.
For the extension of research on the
“democratic peace” concept provides convincing evidence to
suggest that libertarian governments would be highly
unlikely to use such military prowess for aggressive
initiatives but would rather tend to employ it as a
deterrent to preserve stability and the prevailing status
quo.
It is thus no coincidence that virtually all the
“rogue” states who are considered potential risks to global
or regional stability, and liable to use missile technology
and non-conventional capabilities in hostile initiatives are
governed by despotic regimes of one ilk or another.
Indeed the US should not dismiss the
possibility that nuclear capabilities in the hands of a
stable and responsible democracy constitute a force for
peace and stability, bolstering global security rather than
jeopardising it.
In the coming years, the US will have to
seriously address the question of who will dominate the
Indian Ocean, south and central Asia and indeed the eastern
approaches to Europe: powers committed to the preservation
of libertarian values of moderation and restraint or powers
committed to fundamentalism and fanaticism, who would impose
on their surroundings values that are the very antithesis of
those which the US purports to cherish.
An alliance based on special relationship
between the world’s most powerful and the world’s most
populous democracies would create a potent stabilising force
in the region, which together with likeminded regimes could
contribute significantly towards off-setting sources of
upheaval and tumult liable to be injurious to American
interests. |